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Jacob G. Bundy

Researcher at Imperial College London

Publications -  99
Citations -  7743

Jacob G. Bundy is an academic researcher from Imperial College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Metabolomics & Metabolite. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 95 publications receiving 6897 citations. Previous affiliations of Jacob G. Bundy include Macaulay Institute & King's College London.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The cellular geometry of growth drives the amino acid economy of Caenorhabditis elegans

TL;DR: Transcriptomic and metabolomic data are used to show that a change in geometry can explain a variety of phenomena during growth, including changes in the relative expression levels of cytoplasmic and membrane proteins and changes in metabolite pools of free amino acids.
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Hypertonic Saline Therapy in Cystic Fibrosis: Do Population Shifts Caused by the Osmotic Sensitivity of Infecting Bacteria Explain the Effectiveness of this Treatment?

TL;DR: A hypothesis is proposed whereby the positive clinical effects of HS treatment are explained by the osmotic sensitivity of the mucoid sub-population of P. aeruginosa in the CF lung leading to selection against this group in favor of the Osmotically resistant non-mucoid variants.
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Rapid screening of cellular stress responses in recombinant Pichia pastoris strains using metabolite profiling

TL;DR: Untargeted NMR metabolic profiling (metabolomics) of a number of different recombinant strains is used, carried out in a miniaturized format suitable for screening-level experiments, and identified anumber of metabolites which correlated well with UPR-relevant gene transcripts, and so could be potential biomarkers for future high-throughput screening of large numbers of P. pastoris clones.
Book ChapterDOI

Metabolic footprinting: extracellular metabolomic analysis.

TL;DR: Time-resolved metabolic footprinting (TReF) is described, a technique which employs nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and nonlinear curve fitting to understand and visualize metabolite utilization of P. aeruginosa.
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Ecological drivers influence the distributions of two cryptic lineages in an earthworm morphospecies

TL;DR: Tissue arsenic concentrations varied between lineages, supporting previous observations that there are differences in the way the two lineages have adapted to manage exposure to this metalloid.